3-D Printing Provides More Choices for Home Decor

The Wall Street Journal's Leigh Kamping-Carder looks at how 3D printing is transforming the home furnishing market, as the technology's price falls, and consumer interest in quirky on-demand items runs high.

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The Wall Street Journal‘s Leigh Kamping-Carder looks at how 3-D printing is affecting the home furnishing market, as the technology’s price falls, and consumer interest in quirky on-demand items runs high.

For homeowners, that means a seemingly limitless new frontier in home decor that can be quirky or refined.

“It’s not only that they love the product,” says chandelier-maker Michael McHale, who uses 3-D printers. “They’re enamored of the story.”

The online design community for Brooklyn-based 3D printer manufacturer MakerBot, for instance, offers up more than 700,000 free files–including a T. Rex-shaped showerhead.

Kamping-Carder looks at a variety of home applications in the article, some more useful and beautiful than others. While the lamps and faucet featured are stunning, the article also profiles a 3D-printed digital scale called the Milky Weigh that tells you how much milk you have left in a gallon.

Read more on The Wall Street Journal >>

About the Author

Jerry Ascierto

Jerry Ascierto is Editor at Large for the Residential Construction Group at Hanley Wood. Based in the New York City area, Jerry has been covering the multifamily and single-family industries since 2006. He can be reached at jascierto@hanleywood.com or follow him on Twitter @Jascierto.

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